THE ECONOMY

The Land Fund was established on July 1, 1997, to enable the investments held by the former Trustees of the HKSAR Government Land Fund to be formally brought into the government's account. It derives income from its investment in the Exchange Fund.

The Lotteries Fund finances welfare services through grants and loans. Its income is derived mainly from the sharing of the proceeds of the popular Mark Six lotteries.

Management of the Budget

The government manages its finances against the background of a rolling five-year, medium-range forecast of expenditure and revenue. This provides a model for the government's overall consolidated financial position.

The most important principle underlying the government's management of the public finance is that government expenditure, over time, should not grow faster than the economy as a whole. The Budget presented by the Financial Secretary to the legislature each year is developed against the background of the medium-range forecast to ensure that full regard is given to this principle and to longer-term trends in the economy.

Public Expenditure

In accounting terms, public expenditure is taken to include expenditure by the Housing Authority, the two Municipal Councils, the Lotteries Fund and government trading funds, all expenditure charged to the General Revenue Account and expenditure financed by the government's statutory funds other than the Capital Investment Fund. Government grants and subventions to institutions in the private or quasi-private sectors are included, but not spending by organisations in which the government has only an equity stake (such as the Mass Transit Railway Corporation, the Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation and the Airport Authority). Similarly, debt repayments and equity payments are excluded as they do not reflect the actual consumption of resources by the government.

Public expenditure in 1997-98 totalled $234.8 billion. The government itself accounted for $194.2 billion. The growth rate over the preceding year was 11.1 per cent in nominal terms or 4.2 per cent in real terms. Some $62.4 billion, or 26.6 per cent of the public expenditure in 1997-98, was of a capital nature. An analysis of expenditure by function is at Appendix 10. The growth rate of public expenditure is compared with the rate of economic growth at Appendix 12.

Total government revenue in 1997-98 amounted to $281.2 billion. The consolidated cash surplus for the year was $86.9 billion. Details of revenue by source and of expenditure by component for 1997-98 and 1998-99 (Revised Estimate) are at Appendix 13.

The draft estimates of expenditure on the General Revenue Account are presented by the Financial Secretary to the legislature when he delivers his annual Budget speech. In the Appropriation Bill introduced to the legislature at the same time, the administration seeks appropriation of the total estimated expenditure on the General Revenue Account. The estimates of expenditure contain details of the estimated recurrent and capital expenditure of all government departments, including estimates of payments to be made to subvented organisations and estimates of transfers to be made to the statutory funds.

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